Excellent stuff by David Michelinie and the team of John Romita, Jr. and Bob Layton. Doctor Doom is a great foil for Iron Man, and the time travel aspect of each arc is great. I would love to see more '80s Iron Man collected in trade or hardcover. Janice Chiang does the lettering on 249 and 250, and it is horrible. Her hand lettering totally detracts from the reading experience. Aside from that, my only gripe is the fact that this book has perforated glued binding, which is total, utter garbage and has no place in hardcovers. I got this brand new for half price at the Motor City Con in May.

Like the title states, this a collection of black and white Blade stories. These are solid, enjoyable reads loaded with '70s smack talk. I love '70s jive fool comic book smack talkin'. I would like to see Marvel do a hardcover collection of Blade at some point in time.

This was a great read. It's nice to see comics that cover all of the bases, i.e. character development, a healthy dose of action, tying in to continuity, etc. Props to all of the creators involved! Now I want to get War of Kings hardcover, though...damn it! My only gripes are the fact that A) Vulcan is another Summers brother/relation; it is unnecessary and adds nothing to the character and B) there is a female version of Gladiator. Why O why is Marvel so interested in making female versions of everyone these days? It's so DC.

ATOMIKA VOL. 1: GOD IS RED (Mercury, 2006)

Collects Atomika Nos. 1-6 (cover dates March, 2005- January, 2006)

Wow, this title looks like nothing else on the market, both in look and feel. Sal Abbinanti and Andrew Dabb deserve mountains of praise for seeing this through to fruition. The tone of this book is oppressive and melodramatic, and I love it in spite of, or perhaps because of, it. I am very interested in seeing how this turns out, and with the next batch of six issues being nearly done, this will hopefully be collected in trade sooner rather than later. I give this title my highest recommendation. 10/10

Mike Choi is one of the finest artists working in comics today, and this is among the better titles being produced by Marvel today. It's extreme and over the top, but I find myself loving it nonetheless. I am ticked that the next 5 or so issues are contained in crossover trades/hardcovers. Vol. 3 will jump ahead 5 issues! I really don't want to read some dumb ass Cable Messiah War or Dark Avengers/X-Men hardcover just for these issues. Maybe I should (gasp!) buy the floppies!?! Nah.

Decent, entertaining stuff by Matt Fraction and Terry Dodson. Fraction seems to be trying to move the team in a new direction, with mixed results. While this won't be looked back on as the worst era of the team, it also won't be mentioned among the best.

UNCANNY X-MEN: SISTERHOOD (Marvel, 2009)

Collects Uncanny X-Men Nos. 508-512 (cover dates June- August, 2009)

Wait a minute, Psylocke was dead? I mean, I knew that she was dead at one time, but didn't they already resurrect her? Did she die again? I'm confused! The X-Men are such a convoluted clusterphuck of deaths/resurrections that it has become a joke. At least they explained how she went from being a British telepath to an Asian ninja (thanks a lot for that suckiness, Jim Lee!). I haven't read much '90s X-Men, and with garbage like that, Cable, Bishop, and art by Rob Liefeld, why would one want to? Much of Matt Fraction's dialogue has a cheesy one-liner, made for a Michael Bay movie quality to it here. He is also bringing back many unwelcome aspects of the series. All is not lost, though, because Issue 512 is the best of the bunch. I would like to see a Hellfire Club mini-series further exploring the origins of the organization.